New Article features

Poblish has always provided a “more articles like this” facility for every article on the system – not just related articles from that blog or Twitter feed, but related articles from all blogs and Twitter feeds. This list used to appear next to each article, crammed into a column that was always just a little too narrow to make the list truly usable, so I’ve moved it to a new screen which you can pop up using the big “Explore…” button.Explore button

We’ve also restored the “Similar Bloggers” facility and put it alongside the list of articles, to help you explore other bloggers who deal with similar themes. Finally, if you’re logged-in, you’ll find your own individual list of recommended articles. This uses the latest collaborative filtering techniques to suggest a list of articles based on your own ratings, flags, favourites, as well as those of people with tastes similar to your own.

Above the Explore button, you’ll see what looks like a “tag cloud” for the article. However, what you’re seeing is much cleverer than what 99% of other applications offer. We use semantic analysis to determine the article’s key themes, or “Zones“, rather than simply relying on the categories the blogger chose; we rank them according to how often they have been mentioned during the past 24 hours; and we provide a link to the Zone’s home page, where you can see – and follow – a feed of matching articles.

The point of all this is to seamless weave articles – whether blog posts or Twitter posts – into the greater and wider world of political content, using state-of-the-art techniques, and to make it easier than ever for people to explore and to learn.

WordPress plugins: “More like this” from across the blogosphere

Here’s a first look at Poblish‘s first WordPress plugin.

It looks at the content of the current blog post, and automatically identifies related content from across all the content hosted at Poblish – currently 216,296 articles from 1,698 working feeds – returning you a list of the most closely matching articles in under a second.

You can click the name of any blogger or blog to see their live feed (pictured) in a Facebook-style popup frame.

In fact, forget about the screenshot, because you can see the plugin installed on this very blog – just look at the foot of this post, and scroll forward and back through our other posts.

The plugin is stable, but needs to be packaged-up a little so it fits seamlessly into the WordPress world. If you’re impatient to try it out, though, drop me a line and I’ll let you know the two or three steps you need to follow.

Let me know if you have any ideas of your own for developing the plugin. Some of mine are:

  • Ignoring matches from your own blog.
  • Restricting matches by date.
  • Restricting to matches with the same set of tags as the current post – somewhat influenced by Last.fm Radio.